The Cookbook
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Joy (Featuring Mike Jones)
- Party Time
- Irresistable (Featuring Slick Rick)
- Lose Control (Featuring Ciara & Fat Man Scoop)
- My Struggles (Featuring Mary J. Blige & Grand Puba)
- Meltdown
- On & On
- We Run This
- Remember When
- 4 My Man (Featuring Fantasia)
- Can't Stop
- Teary Eyed
- Mommy
- Click Clack
- Time and Time Again
- Bad Man (Featuring Vybez Cartel & M.I.A.)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #58027 in Music
- Released on: 2005-07-05
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: Enhanced, Explicit Lyrics
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Missy's back with her 6th album The Cookbook. The first single, "Lose Control" features R&B princess Ciara and hip-hop motivator Fat Man Scoop. Album also features additional production by long time friend and collaborator Timbaland and The Neptunes. Special guests include Tweet, Fantasia, Slick Rick, Mike Jones, Mary J Blige, Grand Puba and Lil Kim.
Amazon.com
With The Cookbook, the innovative Missy Elliott proves to the masses she is a musical mad scientist whose artistic abilities are unparalleled and without peer. Elliott is a quadruple threat: rapper, singer, songwriter and producer; add that to her woman-empowered lyrics and Missy's ability to be a musical and mental role model is inarguable. As a producer, Missy Elliott knows how to build a great project by incorporating the best talent available, an easy task since so many want to work with her. Not surprisingly, The Cookbook is filled with a world-class guest list. That very large list includes American Idol winner Fantasia , cRunk&B queen Ciara , old-school rapper Slick Rick , dancehall sensation M.I.A. (on the drumline-heavy "Bad Man") and the current queen of soul, Mary J. Blige . In a reversal of roles, "My Struggles" finds Missy singing "Ya'll don't really know my life, y'all don't really know my struggles" while Mary J. raps over a sample of herself from "What's The 411." One unexpected surprise is Missy sings out more than on previous releases. The bare-bones "Remember When" is a definite standout, a 70's-inspired slow jam highlighted by her honest lyrics, sweet falsetto and jazz-affected tones. The beautiful melancholy of "Teary Eyed" is another standout, an amen-inducing testament to a relationship gone wrong and the beginning of the healing process. To hear Missy sing with full rawness and no bravado is a further testament to her talents and will likely bring an even larger audience into her fold. -- Denise Sheppard
Customer Reviews
great cd
I must admit. Ive been sleep on missy's last few albums for the simple fact I had no disire to buy them. But now she came back strong on this album. My favorite songs are lose control which is a dance jam. I have to pop lock on that jam every time I hear it, lol. I prefer when she sings which are my favorite jams they are #9,12,6. It interesting hearing mary j. blidge rap on track 5. But any ways this is a high quality cd from missy elliot and I reccomend it.
Many Recipes But A Good Result
Missy Elliott must get credit for this album cause it was the first where she wasn't entirely relying on Timbaland's production. She let producers like Neptunes, Scott Storch, Rich Harrison and even herelf produce some songs. On some of her previous albums Timbaland had produced the majority of songs and eventually it looked like the production was more important then the quality of the lyrics or hook and Missy's song weren't always that good even if Timbaland's production skills were amazing. Only one single became a hit from this album out of only three released and that was "Lose Control", perhaps the worst song of the whole album that lazily samples Cybotron's classic breakbeat sample that also Africa Bambaataa once used. But this doesn't mean that the album is bad, as usual the production is hot and some interesting artists like old skool rapper Slick Rick appear on "Irresistable", Ciara and super annoying Fatman Scoop on "Lose Control" Mary J Blige on "My Struggles" which is a really good song by the way, then we have Idol Fantasia on "4 My Man". Best songs however are Neptunes "On & On" with a trademark futuristic beat and her third single "We Run This" with great drums and old skool sound. Closer "Bad Man" feauture some dancehall singers that I never heard of before, but it's a welcomed addition that sounds fresh. At the end of the day this is a solid record, with a good mix of trademark Missy beats and some new trendy collaborations aswell, Timbaland's impact here is minimal and infact he only produces 1 song (Joy). But Harrison, Neptunes and Missy herself do a good job on making some trendy party jams aswell as some slower songs. If you like Missy Elliott nothing should stop you to also get this album, but it's not her best. A solid 3.
"The Cookbook" - More Sweet Than Bitter
Is this Missy Elliott's best album? If the critical and commercial response is anything to go by, "The Cookbook", Missy Elliott's 6th studio album & the successor to 2003's commercially abysmal "This Is Not A Test!", must suck to some degree because it barely surpassed U.S. Gold sales. Then again, lacklustre album sales usually don't define an album's quality - a fact that is strongly enforced on this 16-track-long disc, which once again displays Missy Elliott flexing her abilities as a producer, singer, rapper and songwriter. Before and/or after listening to this album, there are four things you should definitely notice.
Firstly, there's the cover art. Aside from Missy Elliott's surprising weight loss, her ladylike, elegant appearance in front of the vintage microphone starkly contrasts to the attitude-packing tomboy, the finger-wagging fat-s**t, the stone-cold face portrait or the dog-handling feminist displayed on the cover arts of "Supa Dupa Fly", "Da Real World", "Miss E...So Addictive" & "This Is Not A Test!", respectively. Perhaps this would indicate a re-invention of sorts, but "The Cookbook" is anything but. Obligatory club bangers like the Apache-sampling, horn-driven raunchiness of "We Run This" & the bland Crunk of "Click Clack" are still present, while many of the album's other tracks -especially the introspective "My Struggles" (featuring Grand Puba & an unexpected rap from guest singer Mary J. Blige) and the Slick Rick featuring/sampling "Irresistible Delicious", one of the album's many endeavours into part-singing/part-rapping raunchiness- are laced with old-school musical inflections.
Secondly, Missy Elliott's female-empowerment shtick is virtually nowhere to be found. "Mommy", a minimalist club joint that aspires to uplift female parent strippers, turns out sounding less like a female-empowerment anthem than another dodgy shot at raunchiness; the aforementioned "We Run This" & "Can't Stop" -featuring Rich Harrison's trademark Go-Go production (e.g. chuck a sexy old-school guitar riff/loop or a bombastic horn sample over lively drum patterns & presto)- are more meaningless displays of unapologetic lewdness ; and the raunchiness factor hits its peak on "Meltdown", which -in the vain of the aforementioned "Irresistible Delicious"- alternates between viciously crude, detailed 16-bar rap verses & an overtly sexual singing hook over smooth, hypnotic production, courtesy of the omnipresent Scott Storch.
Thirdly, "The Cookbook" has more ballads than most of its predecessors, most of which work out a lot better than expected. "Remember When", despite the occasional (and possibly annoying) shots of "YES" and "HOLLER", is a beautiful ballad where Missy Elliott croons with sincerity and emotion about her thankfulness for her boyfriend's forgiving response to her unfaithfulness; "Teary Eyed" displays emotions of vengeance and regret through sharp songwriting and Missy Elliott's emotional singing vocals over a minimalist beat, as does its lesser counterpart "Time And Time Again".
Finally, Timbaland, Missy Elliott's long-time collaboration partner, is only present on 2 of the album's tracks - more specifically, "Joy" (featuring a surprisingly good rap from Mike Jones) & "Partytime" (featuring a short, blunt stab at Sisqo's current irrelevance). The former track, with its weirdly accentuated intro skit, minimalist bounce, ethereal vocal sample, late-track slow-motion effect and Missy's boastful lyrics, is definitely the better of the two tracks, and possibly one of the duo's better tracks in their whole catalogue. While Timbaland isn't direly missed, I would've preferred any of his better concoctions than "On & On", a suitably (but unfortunately) titled chunk of filler, featuring weak production from The Neptunes, an annoying vocal hook from Pharrell Williams & more of Missy Elliott's boastful threats and self-aggrandizement. Thankfully, the Dancehall collaboration between Missy, M.I.A. & Vybez Cartel on the ruthlessly upbeat "Bad Man" (on another note, the conclusive skit is nothing but downright filthy s**t that ought to be banned or restricted or something) and the classic lead single "Lose Control" -an infectious club tune that incorporates smartly chosen samples (Cybotron's "Clear & Hot Streak's "Body Work), Missy Elliott's club-ready attitude, Fatman Scoop's energetic chants and Ciara's sweet vocals (not to mention a short rap and a sweet a Capella break) into a tight Electro/Hip-Hop/Pop jam- does more than pick up the slack.
Altogether, this is a very good (and highly sexual) album that, with or without deep examinations of its purpose or content, is well worth the purchase. 4 stars!
5 Best Tracks:
"Lose Control (feat. Ciara & Fatman Scoop)"
"Bad Man (feat. M.I.A. & Vybez Cartel)"
"My Struggles (feat. Mary J. Blige & Grand Puba)"
"Joy (feat. Mike Jones)"
"Remember When"
Worst Tracks:
"On & On (feat. Pharrell Williams)"
"My Man (feat. Fantasia)"
"We Run This"
"Click Clack"





